Local ice-like structure at the liquid water surface
Nathan L. Odendahl, Phillip L. Geissler

TL;DR
This study reveals that the surface of liquid water contains nanometer-scale ice-like domains, sharing structural features with crystalline ice, which extends understanding of water's surface behavior and its relation to ice.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through simulations that water surfaces exhibit ice-like structural features, providing a unified explanation for observed surface phenomena and linking liquid water to crystalline ice structures.
Findings
Presence of nanometer-scale ice-like domains at water surface
Shared layering and hydrogen bond correlations with ice
Surface structure suggests a continuum from quasi-liquid to quasi-ice layer
Abstract
Experiments and computer simulations have established that liquid water's surfaces can deviate in important ways from familiar bulk behavior. Even in the simplest case of an air-water interface, distinctive layering, orientational biases, and hydrogen bond arrangements have been reported, but an overarching picture of their origins and relationships has been incomplete. Here we show that a broad set of such observations can be understood through an analogy with the basal face of crystalline ice. Using simulations, we specifically demonstrate that water and ice surfaces share a set of structural features suggesting the presence of nanometer-scale ice-like domains at the air-water interface. Most prominent is a shared characteristic layering of molecular density and orientation perpendicular to the interface. Similarities in two-point correlations of hydrogen bond network geometry point…
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